"Creativity keeps changing, film, games and TV are all interacting. Everything is seeping into different industries and different talents, I think it makes us stronger as an industry as we find new places to draw inspiration from."

The producer says she's committed to improving representation in games, remembering her own "Lara moment" from when she was younger.

"I really remember the moment I first played Tomb Raider - which is not a game that sits easily with modern feminism - but it was the first game I'd seen that had a female protagonist that looked like me.

"The more games we make that have different faces in them, and get more people in leadership roles with different skin colours and size and shapes and backgrounds, I think the more diverse we're going to get and the better our stories will be."

Regardless of their industry, the Breakthrough Brits will now work with their mentors and each other to forge the next steps in their careers.

Previous Breakthrough Brits include...

Tom Holland

The 22-year-old became a Breakthrough Brit in 2013 after a starring role in The Impossible.

Before donning Spidey's lycra, Tom was mentored at Bafta by Gravity and Harry Potter producer David Heyman and actor Cillian Murphy.